British media report that a British surgeon has successfully performed surgery to separate 19-month-old conjoined twin girls who were attached at the skull. The articles describe the procedure as difficult and “gruelling,” reflecting the complexity of separating twins whose heads are conjoined. After the operation, the twins are reported to have been successfully separated, indicating that surgeons were able to address the shared connection without derailing the separation goal. The coverage emphasizes the twins’ young age and the location of the conjoining—at the skull—rather than detailing broader medical specifics such as how much tissue or underlying structures were shared. Both accounts present the same core development: the separation operation has been carried out successfully by a British surgeon. The reports focus on the outcome of the surgery rather than subsequent recovery milestones, and they provide limited additional context beyond the twins’ age and attachment point.